October 2017: Turns out that different inhibitory neurons DO play a differential role in sensory processing, if we look at temporal adaptation: http://www.cell.com/cell-reports/fulltext/S2211-1247(17)31429-8

June 2017: Maria is pleased to co-organize the Physics of Hearing workshop at KITP in Santa Barbara, CA. She, Kath and Chris have been learning about cochlear mechanics, speech processing and recognition and chatting to our colleagues in central auditory coding. We will come back with many new ideas for experiments!

April 2017: Big congrats to Dr. Ryan Natan for winning the Winegrad award for the best PhD thesis in neuroscience at Penn! Ryan will receive the award at the BGG Commencement Ceremony on May 15 and will present a brief speech summarizing his research to a broad audience.

April 2017: Big congrats to Chris Angeloni on being awarded an F31 pre-doctoral fellowship from NIDCD to study neuronal mechanisms of hearing in noise! Here's to the next three successful years!

March 2016: Maria is awarded an R01 grant from NIDCD to study "Neuronal circuits supporting learning-driven changes in auditory perception". This is a 5-year grant.

February 2016: Going to CoSyNe? Come learn about our research. Maria is giving a talk on Friday, 2/24, at 8:30 AM at the main conference and on Tuesday, 2/28 at 8 AM at the workshop "Perception and learning of temporal structure in sensory streams". It's early but luckily will leave enough time for skiing! Chris and Jennifer are presenting posters on Thursday night at the main conference (I-14, I-36).

February 2016: We have two postdoctoral positions available -- an experimental and a theoretical. Please see more info under Contact.

December 2016: Congratulations to Ryan Natan on defending his PhD! Ryan crushed it at his defense, and I am so very proud of the beautiful data that he presented. His family much enjoyed the elaborate introduction relating very high-level concepts of cortical coding to our everyday experiences. Good luck to Ryan at Janelia! Don't forget to come and visit!

November 2016: Congratulations to John Briguglio on the successful defense of his PhD thesis! John gave a great talk that convinced even the most theoretical physicists that we can learn a thing or two from neuroscience. Here's to a successful postdoc at Janelia!

November 2016: Come see our posters at APAN and SFN!

November 2016: Congratulations to Maria for receiving the Young Investigator Spotlight award at the Advanced and Perspectives in Auditory Neuroscience Meeting!

May 2016: Congratulations to Ryan, Isaac and Laetitia on yet another awesome paper! In this paper in Cerebral Cortex, we show that neurons in the auditory cortex modify their response properties to sounds depending on their ringing quality -- e.g. the sound of a bell has prolonged ringing, which is termed temporal correlation, whereas the sound of static noise has very low temporal correlation. This paper nicely complements a series of findings in our lab of how neurons adjust their response properties to represent sounds across different acoustic environments.

March 30: Tune in at 2 pm today to the online chat hosted by Maria on how to advance in your career in neuroscience.

March 2016: Our work with Judit Gervain on on identifying the neural correlates of processing of natural sounds in infants has just appeared online! Looking forward to continuing this exciting collaboration!

March 2016: Welcome, Kath! Kath Wood is a new postdoc who comes to us after completing her PhD at the University College London in the group of Dr. Joennifer Bizley.

March 2016: Big congrats to Jennifer, Ryan and Cedric, who presented exciting new data at Cosyne 2016. Maria was so busy as a general chair of the conference that she forgot to post the announcement for the posters in advance. Nonetheless, we got a great turnout at the posters, and the meeting was a great success!

December 2015: Our new paper that characterizes neuronal population responses in the auditory cortex to artificial water-like sounds is now out in European Journal of Neuroscience! Congratulations, Jennifer and Ryan!

December 2015: Our new paper that identifies how cortical inhibition controls auditory behavior is published in PLoS Biology! Congratulations, Mark, John and Ryan!

October 2015: Maria will be delivering the keynote address at the Celebration for Women in Neuroscience at the SFN meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 20 at noon. You need to pre-register to attend!

October 2015: Please come see/hear our presentations at SFN meeting: Ryan will present a poster on neuronal mechanisms for cortical stimulus-specific adaptation on Saturday afternoon (Oct. 17, 57.07/J1), and Jennifer will give a talk on cortical regulation of frequency discrimination on Wednesday (Oct. 21, 8:45 am, N226, 652.04). You can also catch both presentations as posters at the APAN meeting on Friday (Oct. 16).

​October 2015: Our new paper discovering the brain mechanisms that help us hear unexpected sounds is published in eLife! Congratulations, Ryan, John, Mark, Laetitia and Sara! Press release is here.

September 2015: Our new paper on impairment in hearing acuity due to tinnitus is published in PloS One. Congratulations, Laetitia, and good luck on you PhD at Cornell!

August 2015: Our new paper on emergence of invariant representation of vocalizations in the auditory cortex is published in Journal of Neurophysiology online. Congratulations, Dr. Carruthers!

July 2014: Our laboratory’s research is featured on Philadelphia public radio, WHYY: click here for a radio podcast. This is a great link for a broad overview of our research on the neuronal basis of communication.

May 2014: Maria is awarded the Human Frontiers in Science program award to study the development of speech processing in collaboration with Judit Gervain at the Laboratoire de la Perception, CNRS, Paris. Press release is here.

March 2014: Maria and the Penn Neuroscience graduate students had a lot of fun doing presentations about neuroscience at the Independence Charter School.

Oct. 2013: Maria is awarded an R03 from NIDCD on studying "The role of cortical interneurons in auditory processing and learning". This is a new investigator mechanism through NIDCD and is awarded for 3 years.